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by alicek from myFOXdfw Newsroom

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Flexicuffs aren't flexible: that's the first thing I learned about being handcuffed Thursday night on the Marion Street Bridge in St. Paul.

I was one of several dozen media members covering a large protest on the final night of the Republican National Convention. The protesters originally planned to march from the state capitol to the Xcel Center about a mile and a half away. Police blocked one of the bridges over I-94 about ten blocks from the RNC perimeter, keeping the protesters on the capitol (north) side of the freeway.

My colleague John Wise and I found another bridge across and visited the largely peaceful protest. I videotaped officers arresting one agitator to the cheers of the crowd. Just when it seemed this mostly non-violent protest would break up, a second large group came marching south to the bridge. They came from a street that ran closer to the capitol, but I'm not sure where they started.

This second group didn't try to break through the police bridge barrier, but kept marching past it, turning west down the freeway frontage road. Police quickly scrambled ahead and blocked south access to the next bridge across I-94, instead turning the crowd north past a Sears store.

I was a few blocks behind but I saw flashes and heard several loud bangs. When I arrived at the scene, mounted police began corralling protesters into the parking lot of the Sears store. Other officers on bullhorns were telling people to move "southbound" back toward the freeway. Several smoke bombs and flash-bang concussion grenades went off in my immediate area, which I captured on tape. Police finally told everyone to "move toward the bridge."

Once people were on the bridge we were instructed to sit down and put our hands on our heads. I sat on the median between John and a reporter from Variety magazine, and I could see several other media members I'd spotted over the last several hours sitting about 50 feet away. About an hour later an officer on a bullhorn announced everyone on the bridge would be arrested, and to cooperate with officers as they cuffed us one by one. They asked that we keep our hands on our heads until we were cuffed.

At least two officers recognized that we and a few others on the median were credentialed media members, as we all had RNC Radio/TV tags around our necks. They asked about six of us on the median to sit together. We were given the distinct impression more than once that we would be cuffed but then merely ticketed and released on the scene. The other media members I'd spotted before sitting 50 feet away had already been taken away.

Finally I was asked to stand while I was handcuffed. My camera bag and pockets were searched, my information was taken, and I was escorted to another area by a polite and respectful policeman in riot gear. He waited with me for about 45 minutes. John and the Variety reporter were nearby, each with their own police escort.

Finally another officer noticed my credentials and told my escorting officer he'd heard the media was being ticketed and released in a "grassy knoll" area (yes, that's what they called it). Both officers walked me there, asking a few different lawmen if they knew about the orders, which no one seemed to know anything about. They cut the cuffs off me (I had to wriggle out of one of them, and yes they are very IN-flexi-cuffs). They then told me to wait, trusting I wouldn't disappear with a perimeter of officers nearby. I swore I wouldn't move until someone in uniform told me to.

While I waited for someone to give me a ticket, I saw something that made me go cold: John was led to another area and was being photographed for a mugshot. Then they took his media credentials and bagged them, along with his camera and gear, and led him to a bus. I was suddenly very, very nervous. What was happening? Why wasn't he being released with me? I saw the Variety reporter go through the same thing, too. My escorting officer had disappeared. Who else knew about releasing the media? Clearly, no one in my immediate area.

I stood there getting more and more agitated. About half an hour later the Public Information Officer for the Ramsey County Sheriff approached me and asked who I was and why I was standing there by myself. He laughed when I explained I was waiting for a ticket. He then escorted me to the perimeter of the scene and told me I was free to leave. I told him about my colleague on the bus, which had just left, and he explained he couldn't do anything now, but would be on the lookout for him. And then he left.

And I turned around and began walking very fast in the opposite direction.

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Here's a couple of pictures I've been meaning to post before the end of the RNC. The first is a setup here at the FOX news tent... they're calling it the "FOX Experience." Delegates enter through a seperate door and can see the sausage factory news operation inside. Kinda makes you feel like you're in a zoo, with all these people gazing at you from behind a barrier. It's only missing the bottles of hand sanitizer at the exits.

But the folks get to catch glimpses of the FOX stars like Bill O'Reilly and Karl Rove (no I'm not stalking Karl Rove, he's just everywhere. Here he's the middle guy with his back to the camera:)

This morning there were a trio of beauties on the set: FOX's Shepard Smith, Miss Minnesota Teen USA, and Miss Minnesota USA:

Not sure what they were talking about, but I'm pretty sure it's not about whether Russia's attack on Georgian troops was justified in light of Georgia's attempt to retake the breakaway region of South Ossetia.

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A new Census bureau report shows that more American women are waiting to have children, and more than ever before are choosing to remain childless.

According to the report in the New York Times, twenty percent of women aged 40 to 44 have no children. That's double the number from just thirty years ago.

Though it's becoming more common, I'm not sure that the choice to remain childless is as socially acceptable as having children in your 40s.

I know a couple in their early 40s, married for 15 years, who decided early in their marriage to not have children. The wife has been on the receiving end of all kinds of unbelievably rude comments about her "duty" and her "purpose" in life. As if someone else can tell you what your purpose in life is.

What do you think? Is it selfish for women to put off childbearing until the last possible second? Is it a good idea for some people to avoid being parents? Tell me your thoughts.



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Be sure to watch the jailhouse interview with James Broadnax, the 19-year-old who admits to shooting two men to death outside a Christian music studio in Garland last week:

http://www.myfoxdfw.com/myfox/pages/ContentDetail?cont
entId=6830893




His attitude is shocking and so, so sad: he says his life to this point has been a waste, and he has nothing to live for; why not shoot two people in the head and steal their car?

There's only difference: three young lives cut short, but only one by choice.

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Heather's new baby, Miss Lily Rae West Roberts, arrived today at 12:57 p.m.
She weighed in at a healthy 9 lbs., 9 oz. and is 20.5 inches long.

Mom, baby, big sister Emmy and Dad Jeff are all doing terrific!

Please leave your well wishes here for Heather to read!!!!


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Did you guys SEE this video? This guy really defines the word "meltdown"!
There's a question about whether it's staged or not (it IS the internet, after all) but that's an awfully expensive stunt to stage if it's not real.

Take a look!!

http://www.myfoxdfw.com/myfox/pages/ContentDetail?cont
entId=6696338

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Ever wonder how the weather team puts together their forecasts? Do the anchors just read the teleprompter or practice before they go on air? Is the web team as glamorous as they seem (ha ha)? Find out the answers to these questions and more tonight during our Behind The Scenes online All-Access show starting at 8:45 right here on myFOXdfw.com.

FOX 4's Steve Noviello takes you behind the cameras to show you how we put together the 9 p.m. newscast. There are a lot more people than just Steve, Heather and Dan that make this all work out -- learn what a producer, writer, editor, photographer, desk assignment editor and floor crew person does.

Also, participate in our live chat and ask your questions -- we'll do our best to answer them LIVE!

If you have any questions I'll try to pre-answer them here----
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A new study found that parents spend 30 percent more time with their first-born children than with the rest of the brood.

Now, I wager that the first-borns among us will say that's because they were busy getting instructions on how to feed, care for, and clean up after their younger brethen.

I say that only because I'm the youngest of five kids. :) Yes, I got away with murder. ("I didn't get to do that when I was your age!" was the constant refrain growing up.)

What are your thoughts on birth order and how it plays out in personality? Does it really make a difference? Many first-borns are high achievers and perfectionists, but I suppose it's not always true. Where do you fall in your family, and did it make a difference in how your parents treated you?

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Five perfect strangers have helped raise more than $7,000 for a mentally challenged man who was the subject of a FOX 4 story on Tuesday night.

Johnny Bryant, 53, has worked for the last 35 years as a stocker in a Brookshire grocery in Tarrant County. He has very limited capacity-- he does not read well. He stocks shelves by matching the pictures on the cans together. But he is reliable and hardworking and cheerful.

Bryant lost all of the $151,000 in his 401k account after a woman named Cynthia Hardee befriended him and talked him into cashing it out. She spend $73,000 on herself and talked him into wasting the rest.

When jurors convicted Hardee of theft and sentenced her to 5 years in prison, the jury forewoman decided to go one step further. She donated the money she earned from jury duty ($166) and convinced other jurors to do the same. The prosecutor wrote a $250 check. They put the money into a bank account to benefit Bryant, to help replace some of the lost retirement money.

Bryant can never retire-- he must keep working. Let's help him if we can.

Since we aired this story last night, five more people have given money to this fund, bringing the donation total to $7,000!!!! One person donated $3,000! Another gave $1,900. If you can help by giving $10 or $5 the next time you go to the bank, why not?

To find out how to help, visit the story link below: (see video of Johnny Bryant in the sidebar)
http://www.myfoxdfw.com/myfox/pages/ContentDetail?cont
entId=6324863

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On my way to work today, I stopped to get my usual junkie hit ---er, Starbucks latte and went to pull into what I thought was an empty parking space.
Instead, here's what I saw:



It's a little hard to see, so here's a closer look:



That's right, two DPD mounted patrol officers and their horses were parked (double parked?) outside the neighborhood opium den. While one officer was inside presumably examining the facilities, the other was outside texting on his Blackberry while astride Old Nelly.

That is, he was texting while he wasn't fending off questions from the local ladies. I swear, mounted cops are CHICK MAGNETS. There were women coming out of the hair salon next door with foil in their roots wanting to pet the pretty horsies. It was the most remarkable thing I've seen in a while.

What I want to know is how they got to the corner of Midway & Northwest Highway on HORSEBACK.


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You'd think any sport that relies on gravity would be easy. Take skiing, for example. A motorized lift takes you up the mountain, and gravity takes you down.

And boy, does it.

I just returned from a week in Telluride, Colorado with my hubbie and a large group of assorted family. I was the most uncoordinated one there. My brother has all the athletic ability in the family; I have the talent of sleeping 11 1/2 hours straight if I want to.



Anyway, Telluride is fantastically beautiful, but not easy to reach. Not only did we stay at 9,500 feet, (that's the view from our condo above) but skied the ridge of the mountain  (highest point 12,255-- more photos of that hopefully by tomorrow).

Here's the trail map:
http://tellurideskiresort.com/TellSki/TellSkiAssets/fi
les/main/Telluride0708TrailMap.jpg


Coming down was predictably interesting: full of stops and starts, sloppy turns, and more than a few falls. No yard sales, but still enough to get teased over apres-ski JaegerBombs and other ridiculous drinks that no one consumes during Real Life.

((TMI warning: I'll be nursing a nasty-looking big toe and a pair of unpleasantly yet symetrically-placed hindquarter bruises. That's due to skiing, not the drinking.))

Anyway, the town itself is lovely, and expensive. Here's a look with my husband via the cellphone camera.



There's a much more interesting story about this vacation adventure still to come.

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alicek

I am a myFOXdfw.com Web Producer.

Member Since: 12/20/2006